“…), social and familial factors, readiness for motherhood, planned pregnancy, primiparous-multiparous pregnancy, number of children in the family, stress and psychiatric problems faced during pregnancy, and perceived support (Aksoy et al, 2021; Ulu and Bayraktar, 2018). It is also known that the transition to parenting and the acceptance of the role of the mother are experienced and shaped according to previous life experiences (Camacho et al, 2010). In this context, it is emphasized that one of the important factors that affect the development of prenatal attachment and the creation of a novel identity as a mother is childhood traumas (Berthelot et al, 2019; Christie et al, 2018; Sancho-Rossignol et al, 2018; Stark Stigger et al, 2020; Talmon et al, 2019).…”